Buy Cars and Trucks in Issaquah, Washington

Ford : Taurus SE 2006 Ford Taurus SE
Ford : Taurus SE 2006 Ford Taurus SE
$3,750.00
Time Left: 9h 26m
MG : MGB 1965 MG MGB convertible
MG : MGB 1965 MG MGB convertible
$8,200.00 (15 Bids)
Time Left: 15h 39m
Toyota : Land Cruiser FJ-40 FJ-40,  FJ40
Toyota : Land Cruiser FJ-40 FJ-40, FJ40
$11,100.00
$22,000.00
Time Left: 1d 10h 51m
Audi : A8 A8L 2005 Audi A8L - Fantastic Example!
Audi : A8 A8L 2005 Audi A8L - Fantastic Example!
$3,550.00
$20,995.00
Time Left: 1d 20h 1m
Chevrolet hot rod
Chevrolet hot rod
$20,100.00 (2 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 21h 12m
Mercury : Cougar 1968 Mercury Cougar
Mercury : Cougar 1968 Mercury Cougar
$3,050.00
$7,900.00
Time Left: 1d 21h 18m
Chevrolet : Bel Air 150 210 BELAIR 1956 CHEV BELAIR HARDTOP
Chevrolet : Bel Air 150 210 BELAIR 1956 CHEV BELAIR HARDTOP
$25,100.00 (11 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 17h 16m
Ford : Thunderbird 2002 Ford Thunderbird Custom With Porthole Top
Ford : Thunderbird 2002 Ford Thunderbird Custom With Porthole Top
$14,101.00 (21 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 18h 28m
Chevrolet : Camaro 1970 Chevrolet Camaro Rally Sport
Chevrolet : Camaro 1970 Chevrolet Camaro Rally Sport
$19,100.00 (14 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 18h 51m

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Questions Related to issaquah, washington cars

Provided By Y! Answers

I really need help with this. Please read, I would like closure, but I don't know what to do or where to look.?
Question:
Ok so I became really good friends with this girl named Sarah Laurette on here. We talked all the time, and were really close but I never asked her last name (assuming it's not Laurette) because it wasn't really important. So one day she stopped talking to me out of the blue when we talked every day. I found out through one of her friends that she had been in a car accident. When I asked how she was doing her friend never replied and ended up deleting her formspring account so I assumed the worst. About a month passed and I found another friend of hers online. I emailed her and she told me she had passed away from the surgery. I was so upset and tried to email her back but she never replied and deleted her youtube account. So now I have absolutely no connection to her friends or family or ANYONE that she knows (because I have never met her in person). I just want to read her obituary and find out when she passed away for closure. I think about her everyday. I have found out through months and months of research that: She lived in Kennewick, Issaquah, or Richland, Washington She was transferring to Washington State University and was registered for classes but never got to attend any of them because she was hospitalized. She used to live in LA She attended *************** College I have tried looking online for the obituary in 3 of the major newspapers in the Washington area where she was from but nothing. So, how do I find her when I don't know her last name, don't know where she lived exactly, or anything like that? I have thought about calling her college, but I doubt they will give out information about her because it is confidential. She might not have even attended that college forsure. I don't know what to do :( I am going to bed now because it is late, but if anyone can help me, I will email you back tomorrow. Thank you


Answer:
Hi well not knowing her to talk with I would just give her respect in passing by leaving it be OK ♥

I got a ticket for negligent driving in the second degree. Can someone answer a few questions for me?
Question:
Okay first off, I am not looking for a response telling me to "slow down" or "balls up" and pay the fine. I'm looking for advice, not a safety lecture. I have gotten three tickets before this one. All three of them were dismissed in court, so I have a clean record. I was driving with five friends in my car at 11:45pm. I was going EXACTLY the speed limit, not a mile an hour over it. One of my friends was reaching down to get something on the ground, so I thought it would be funny to jerk the car around, to make it difficult for him to pick up his phone. Before I performed this action, I made sure there were NO oncoming vehicles, and NO cars in front of me or behind me. I also checked the sidewalks to make sure there were no pedestrians around. After I safely checked my surroundings, I started swerving erratically in my own lane. Not once did I cross the lines into another lane. I remained in my lane for the five-ten seconds I was swerving. A few seconds after I stopped swerving I saw police car lights flashing in my mirrors. I pulled over and the police officer came up to the car. Of course she asked me if I had been drinking. I had not had any alcohol to drink, and none of my friends in the car did either. We also did not have any alcohol with us in the vehicle. She asked for the usual information and went back to her car. Twenty minutes later she came back to my car and handed me a $550 ticket for negligent driving in the second degree (RCW 46.61.525). I was shocked. For one, I had a clean driving record, and I wasn't speeding or endangering the lives of others. She asked me if I understood why she gave me a ticket...and I told her no. I tried explaining to her that I was safe about it. I also brought up how 95% of drivers will drift over the yellow line on a road, or a white line that seperates the road and the bike/walking shoulder. I told her that I NEVER do this because I think it is reckless and downright dangerous. Mainly because they are not aware that they are drifting over the lines. Can you say an accident waiting to happen? Of course she wouldn't even aknowledge the arguement I was trying to bring to the issue. She stood firm and said it was unsafe. I've had my fair shair of communicating with cops while sitting in the drivers seat, (I've been pulled over 13 times, only 4 of them for speeding, and 5 of them I made the cop look like an idiot because their reasoning for pulling me over was completely flawed). I got a lawyer for the three tickets that were dismissed, so I know the routine. My question is, should I get a lawyer for this ticket? And do I have a fair shot at beating this ticket? Unfortunately the city I got the ticket in, (Redmond, Washington) trains their police officers to write flawless tickets without a single mistake. No other city in my area does that. In addition, Redmond is not doing to well with all the recent budget cuts that have taken place. So their police officers will write tickets for the smallest mistakes that drivers make. This is not just my dumb opinion, I have actually spoken to police officers from Redmond, and from other surrounding cities including, Sammamish, Issaquah, and Bellevue. I hope to hear some good advice on this issue. Thank you in advance for your replies! -Brandon


Answer:
Hello , When you send in the ticket indicate you would like to challenge the charges/officer , you will later be assigned a court date . Somewher on the ticket will indicate your options . Any other questions you may call the County Courthouse and ask the clerk . When you get to the courtroom ... ask the person sitting there taking attendance that you would like a public defender . You will be givin a public defender . You will discuss in private your case . The defender will argue for you with the District Attorney or the Assistant District Attorney and come back with an answer . Or you may be offered a plea bargain to reduce the charge and lesser fine . You may get the charges dropped but unlikely .

I got a ticket for negligent driving in the second degree. Can someone answer a couple of questions for me?
Question:
Okay first off, I am not looking for a response telling me to "slow down" or "balls up" and pay the fine. I'm looking for advice, not a safety lecture. I have gotten three tickets before this one. All three of them were dismissed in court, so I have a clean record. I was driving with five friends in my car at 11:45pm. I was going EXACTLY the speed limit, not a mile an hour over it. One of my friends was reaching down to get something on the ground, so I thought it would be funny to jerk the car around, to make it difficult for him to pick up his phone. Before I performed this action, I made sure there were NO oncoming vehicles, and NO cars in front of me or behind me. I also checked the sidewalks to make sure there were no pedestrians around. After I safely checked my surroundings, I started swerving erratically in my own line. Not once did I cross the lines into another lane. I remained in my lane for the five-ten seconds I was swerving. A few seconds after I stopped swerving I saw police car lights flashing in my mirrors. I pulled over and the police officer came up to the car. Of course she asked me if I had been drinking. I had not had any alcohol to drink, and none of my friends in the car did either. We also did not have any alcohol with us in the vehicle. She asked for the usual information and went back to her car. Twenty minutes later she came back to my car and handed me a $550 ticket for negligent driving in the second degree (RCW 46.61.525). I was shocked. For one, I had a clean driving record, and I wasn't speeding or endangering the lives of others. She asked me if I understood why she gave me a ticket...and I told her no. I tried explaining to her that I was safe about it. I also brought up how 95% of drivers will drift over the yellow line on a road, or a white line that seperates the road and the bike/walking shoulder. I told her that I NEVER do this because I think it is reckless and downright dangerous. Mainly because they are not aware that they are drifting over the lines. Can you say an accident waiting to happen? Of course she wouldn't even aknowledge the arguement I was trying to bring to the issue. She stood firm and said it was unsafe. I've had my fair shair of communicating with cops while sitting in the drivers seat, (I've been pulled over 13 times, only 4 of them for speeding, and 5 of them I made the cop look like an idiot because their reasoning for pulling me over was completely flawed). I got a lawyer for the three tickets that were dismissed, so I know the routine. My question is, should I get a lawyer for this ticket? And do I have a fair shot at beating this ticket? Unfortunately the city I got the ticket in, (Redmond, Washington) trains their police officers to write flawless tickets without a single mistake. No other city in my area does that. In addition, Redmond is not doing to well with all the recent budget cuts that have taken place. So their police officers will write tickets for the smallest mistakes that drivers make. This is not just my dumb opinion, I have actually spoken to police officers from Redmond, and from other surrounding cities including, Sammamish, Issaquah, and Bellevue. I hope to hear some good advice on this issue. Thank you in advance for your replies! -Brandon


Answer:
I'm not sure if the charge you got is correct to call it negligent. What you were doing was more controlled swerving. I understand the cops point of view for issuing you a citation but I believe that the charge was a bit stiff. Vary course of travel, fail to maintain control of vehicle, fail to operate vehicle in a safe manner, negligent means you weren't in control, meaning other contributing factors, usually saved for alcohol related incidents. The other catch is you admitted to your actions, telling the officer what you were doing. Although that is usually the correct approach, it burned you this time. I recommend making a court date to see if you can get your charge reduced. Depending on your speed you were traveling when you decided that this maneuver was funny, you may get the judge to work with you. If you were going 25 mph, then you may get lucky, if you were traveling much faster, then I doubt it. One thing you may want to try, when you go to court and you see the officer there that wrote the ticket, ask her if she would agree to a lesser charge, let her bring it up to the judge. As long as you were polite and didn't piss her off, it should work. As far as the Lawyer, that's a personal thing, generally your paying a Lawyer to do exactly what your trying to do..lessen the fine or charge. If you think with your experience you can pull it off, go for it. If you have the money to afford an attorney, get one. Usually the attorney talks with the prosecutor before the exam and sets up the deal. You could save the money and do that as well.